How to Have a Gorgeous and Organized Kitchen!

Frustrated with your kitchen? Know the space could be better? We asked a local expert for her advice on what you can do today to improve your kitchen, how to work around the most common kitchen design mistakes, her favorite small space ideas and more! Read ahead for great tips, ideas and inspiring photos...

Cindy Black, an architect in Austin, is behind the great kitchen transformations at Hello Kitchen Design. Along with her husband, architect Rick Black, Cindy tackles a number of residential and restaurant kitchens, working with clients to maximize space and beauty in kitchens within reasonable budgets. Cindy graciously answered some of the most pressing kitchen design issues affecting homeowners and renters today:

Where do you suggest clients start when they are about to tackle a kitchen they are unhappy with?A lot of clients start by visiting showrooms or collecting images from magazines and some start by shopping for a designer or architect. The second step is to analyze how you cook and understand what you are lacking. If someone can be specific about their needs, then it makes the design process a bit smoother and more efficient.

What are the most common mistakes that clients make with their kitchen design?

Poor lighting: Task lighting is more important than overhead lighting in a kitchen. Top priority is a warm light that adequately illuminates the work surface.

Too much of any one color: A lot of finish materials are available in natural tones, which can be great on their own, but not so great in combination. Try to balance out warm with cool, or introduce a bright white or vivid color to balance things out. Using one cabinet finish throughout a large kitchen can be pretty relentless.

Bad proportions: My pet peeve is to see a kitchen with upper cabinets that stop 10" short of the ceiling, or too much variety in door sizes, or chamfered corners.

What could a homeowner do today to improve their kitchen space?

Take stock of what you own and make sure your problem is not just about storage (or lack thereof). I have a method for working through this often difficult issue: How to de-clutter your kitchen .

Invest in an appliance that is currently giving you trouble (an old electric range, a noisy, water-wasting dishwasher, or an ancient refrigerator).

Replace window coverings, or just remove them altogether. Go with something easy to clean and operate. Don't forget to open the window and let the fresh air in once in a while!

What can renters do to improve the look of their kitchen without causing any permanent changes?

Start with the first step above!

To open up space (since a cramped kitchen is usually a problem for renters), you can remove the doors of the upper cabinets, store them in a safe place, and rearrange your items to make a pleasant display on your 'new' open shelves.

Focus on accessories that you can take with you later: a wall clock, tea towels, utensil jar, and other countertop storage. Try to find these items in colors that excite you and show off your personality... and hopefully these will overshadow the dingy cabinets or bad wall color!

What are the best things to improve on when you've got a tiny kitchen? What are your favorite small space solutions?

24" Refrigerators are perfectly functional, and save a lot of space for a teeny kitchen.

Single bowl sinks are smart, especially because there is usually 'wasted' cabinet space below any kitchen sink because of plumbing and disposal parts.

Eliminate the dishwasher altogether, which will save cost as well as 24" of lower cabinet.

Designate a space for the trash in the lower cabinets, as a large trash can will overwhelm a tiny kitchen.

Bring in natural daylight and try to capture an expansive view to the outside.

Finally, what's your favorite tip, idea, trend or color palette?I like a mixture of color palettes in a kitchen--a combination of natural and painted wood, marble and wood countertops, and bronze hardware. I like copper and want to use more of it! I like an open shelf designated for cookbooks. I like a lounge area in the kitchen, for a little loveseat or 'coffee' chair. I love banks of windows right at counter-height--forget those upper cabinets! I like simple, low tech details--like a slab of wood dropped onto a stuccoed base. I think we've gotten trended out of all the machined products out there, and it would be refreshing to get closer to the materials as they're found in nature.

What do you think of Cindy's kitchen ideas and kitchen transformations? What ideas do you think you could implement in your own space? What ideas have you come up with that have saved you space or money? Let us know!